Calculators

Startup Cap Table Calculator & Simulator

A cap table is the single source of truth for who owns what — and the first thing investors and acquirers ask for. This simulator builds yours from founder shares up, then layers on each funding round so you can see exactly how pre-money valuations, option pools and new investors reshape ownership over time. Model your seed, Series A and beyond, and watch your founder stake evolve round by round.

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Cap Table Simulator
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Methodology

How it works

1

How the cap table is calculated

Everything is modelled in shares, because that's the only honest way to compound dilution across several rounds. Founders start with a share count; each round prices new shares off the pre-money valuation — the price per share is the pre-money divided by the existing fully-diluted shares. The new investor receives shares equal to their cheque divided by that price, which works out to investment ÷ post-money of the company.

Because new shares are issued rather than taken from anyone, every existing holder keeps their exact share count but owns a smaller slice of a larger pie. Tracking real shares (not just percentages) is what lets the model stay correct after two, three or four rounds — percentages alone drift.

2

The option pool shuffle — who really pays

Investors almost always require an employee option pool to be created or topped up as part of a round, and they want it counted in the pre-money. That means the pool is carved out of the existing shareholders' equity — the founders — not the incoming investor. This simulator models pool top-ups the standard pre-money way, so a 10% post-round pool costs founders several extra points on top of the investor's stake.

If an existing pool is already larger than the target, it isn't shrunk — it simply dilutes alongside everyone else. Negotiating pool size, and whether it sits in the pre- or post-money, is one of the highest-leverage terms in any early round.

3

Why founder ownership compounds downward

Each round multiplies your ownership by roughly (1 − the new investor's percentage), so dilution stacks. Selling 20% at seed and another 20% at Series A doesn't leave you with 60% — it leaves you closer to 64% of what you had, before any option pools. The ownership-over-time view makes this visible: you can watch the founders' slice shrink while the price per share (hopefully) climbs.

A rising share price is the whole point — owning a smaller percentage of a far more valuable company is how founders build real wealth. The goal isn't to avoid dilution, it's to take it deliberately.

4

Use it to plan your raise

Model the rounds you expect, then sanity-check the end state: do the founders retain enough ownership and motivation by the time you reach Series B? Is the pool big enough to hire without a painful top-up next round? Adjust pre-money, cheque size and pool until the trajectory looks healthy, then use it to pressure-test any term sheet you're handed.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions